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Volcanoes
Presented by: Ms. Burke
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of California, Los Angeles
CCMS 6th Grade Earth Science
Eruption Videos
Hawaii
Kilauea
Video
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5138291898525259472
&hl=en#
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BicT13ecUbc
http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=1398777404573
Iceland
First
pictures from the new crater at Eyjafjallajök
Volcanoes and Tectonic Plates
Volcanic activity and the Earth’s tectonic plates
Stratovolcanoes tend to form at subduction zones, or convergent plate margins,
where an oceanic plate slides beneath a continental plate and contributes to the rise
of magma to the surface.
At rift zones, or divergent margins, shield volcanoes tend to form as two oceanic
plates pull slowly apart and magma effuses upward through the gap.
Volcanoes are not generally found at strike-slip zones, where two plates slide
laterally past each other.
“Hot spot” volcanoes may form where plumes of lava rise from deep within the
mantle to the Earth’s crust far from any plate margins.
* Map locations of volcanoes and the tectonic plates to see what patterns emerge
Science Questions:
Are most volcanoes located near edge or near the
center of the tectonic plates?
Are there certain types of plate boundaries where you
are more likely to find volcanoes?
“Ring of Fire”: type of plate boundary surrounding it??
most common type of volcano found there??
BIG QUESTION: Is there a connection between the type
of plate boundary and the type of volcano found there?
Using your map & the map on page 159:
Label each type of plate boundary (convergent,
divergent, transform) with a different color
Label each type of volcano (composite, cinder
cone, shield) with a different color
Draw arrows at each boundary to indicate the
direction of plate motion
Create a legend for your map
Shield
Stratovolcano
Cinder Cone
(Composite)
Types of Volcanoes (simple version)
Why are there different types?
They are made from different materials
Recall the different types of plates:
Oceanic
Continental
Are they made out of the same “stuff”?
*Viscosity lab activity
Viscosity: measure of a fluid’s resistance to flow
Determined by the composition of the fluid
(what it is made of)
The oceanic and continental crusts have
different compositions.
Oceanic Crust is primarily Basalt
Continental Crust is mainly Granite
These materials have different densities when
solid and different viscosities when molten
Lava types and their viscosities:
Relative Size of Volcano Types
Shield Volcanoes (low viscosity)
Shield volcanoes
form from
eruptions of
flowing lava. The
lava spreads out
and builds up
volcanoes with
broad, gently
sloping sides. The
shape resembles a
warrior's shield.
Cinder Cones (medium viscosity)
Cinder cones are very
small cone-shaped
volcanoes built from
erupting lava that
breaks into small
pieces as it blasts into
the air. As the lava
pieces fall back to the
ground, they cool and
harden into cinders
that pile up around the
volcano's vent.
Composite (high viscosity)
Composite
volcanoes are built
from eruptions of
lava and tephra
that pile up in
layers, or strata,
much like layers of
cake and frosting.
These volcanoes
form symmetrical
cones with steep
sides.
Dome (super high viscosity)
Lava domes are
formed lava too
viscous to flow
far, so the lava
piles over and
around its vent.
They grow largely
by expansion from
within.
They often form in
calderas of
stratovolcanoes
following large
eruptions.
Name that Volcano!
Identify:
Type
Plate Tectonic setting
Viscosity (high, medium, low)
of the following volcanoes…
Composite
Mount
Fuji, Japan
Convergent boundary
Cinder cones
Hawaii
In the summit basin of Haleakala, a
massive shield volcano that makes up
75% of the Island of Maui.
Shield
Mauna Loa Volcano, Hawai`i.
Hotspot
Lava erupts from a fissure on Mauna Loa
March 25, 1984.
Lava dome
Novarupta Volcano, Katmai NP, Alaska
Convergent boundary
Enormous explosive eruption in 1912 could be
heard 750 miles away and shot ash 20 miles
high.
The Dome erupted in the caldera
Cinder Cone
Pu`u ka Pele, Hawaii
Hotspot
Erupted on Mauna Kea Volcano (sheild).
Composite
Mount St. Helens, Cascade Range, WA
Convergent boundary
Composite
Mount St. Helens, Cascade Range, WA
Convergent boundary
After the volcano “blew its top” on May
18, 1980. Ash plume reached ~15 miles
high. Most destructive U.S. eruption.
2005
Lava Dome
In the Crater of Mount St. Helens, WA
Convergent boundary
Cinder cone
Pu`u `O`o cone at Kilauea Volcano,
Hawaii.
Hotspot
Composite
Arenal Volcano, in Costa Rica
Convergent boundary
Composite
Colima Volcano, Mexico.
Convergent boundary
Colima is the most historically active
volcano in Mexico.
Lava Dome (Obsidian flow)
Long Valley Caldera, California.
Caldera collapsed after a huge eruption
760,000 years ago, 50 times bigger
than Mt. St. Helen’s.
Domes formed in the caldera following
a series of explosive eruptions in the
Mono-Inyo Volcanic Chain.
Cinder cone
Pu`u `O`o cone at Kilauea Volcano,
Hawaii.
Hotspot
Lava Dome
Little Glass Mountain, Medicine Lake, CA
(This is where I got the obsidian.)
Cinder cone
Little Lake, (Mohave Desert) California.
Composite
Mount Mageik Volcano, Katmai NP, AK
Convergent Boundary
Composite
Santa Maria volcano, in Guatemala
Convergent boundary
Santa Maria had a huge eruption in 1902,
(1.3 cubic miles of lava over 2 days).
Cinder cone…
and
Shield Volcano
Mauna Loa, Hawaii
Hotspot
Composite
Mt. Rainier, WA.
Convergent boundary
Shield
Mauna Kea volcano, Hawaii
Hotspot
Cinder
Cone,
Mojave Desert, CA
Caldera
of a composite volcano
Crater Lake, Mount Mazama, OR
Convergent boundary